NVIDIA Quietly Releases GeForce MX250 & MX230: Entry-Level Laptop GeForce
by Ryan Smith on February 21, 2019 11:00 AM ESTWith the launch of their GeForce 20 Series parts already well underway, it was only a matter of time until NVIDIA updated their low-end parts as well, and that time has finally arrived. Quietly published on NVIDIA’s website this morning are the product pages for the GeForce MX250 and MX230 graphics processors. The entry-level members of NVIDIA’s laptop lineup, these Pascal parts will eventually replace the current GeForce MX110/130/150 parts.
As has annoyingly become tradition for NVIDIA, they’re officially saying very little about the new parts. The official specifications don’t include anything about clockspeeds, CUDA core counts, ROPs, etc. Instead, NVIDIA only confirms a basic set of features: both parts use GDDR5 memory, both feature GPU boost functionality, and both are based on the company’s Pascal architecture. Taking a stab in the dark here, these are almost certainly cut-down GP108 parts, similar to the previous MX150. So we’re looking at 384 (or fewer) CUDA cores at various frequencies, attached to GDDR5 over a 64-bit memory bus.
Best Guess: NVIDIA Laptop Video Card Specification Comparison | ||||
Typical MX250 | Typical MX230 | |||
CUDA Cores | 384 | 384? | ||
ROPs | 16 | 16? | ||
Boost Clock | Variable | (Lower than MX250) | ||
Memory Type | GDDR5 | GDDR5 | ||
Memory Bus Width | 64-bit | 64-bit | ||
VRAM | <=4GB | <=2GB | ||
GPU | GP108 | GP108 | ||
Manufacturing Process | Samsung 14nm | Samsung 14nm | ||
Launch Date | 02/21/2019 | 02/21/2019 |
NVIDIA’s low-end parts have typically been half a generation or so behind their leading parts, so the MX250 and MX230 are no exception. Despite this, as the previous MX130 was based on Maxwell (GM108) and sometimes paired with DDR3, this is actually a big step up for these parts. Still, clockspeed is going to be everything here as far as performance goes, as these low-end parts tend to ship with a wide variety of clockspeeds depending on what a laptop manufacturer needs.
NVIDIA for its part does once again offer their “GeForce Performance Score”, but since these values are relative to a floating target – in this case the UHD 620 iGPU in Intel’s Whiskey Lake-U i5-8265U, the scores can’t be compared to past NVIDIA parts. Not that it matters for NVIDIA or its customers, as NVIDIA is competing with Intel’s iGPUs as a first-tier performance upgrade, not competing with their own past parts. In this case, NVIDIA is touting their parts as offering 2.6x and 3.5x the performance of the UHD 620 respectively.
Based on NVIDIA's previous release cadences for their low-end laptop parts, xpect to see these new processors show up in laptops in the very near future. Traditionally these parts are paired with Intel U-series processors, and I expect to see the same here.
Source: NVIDIA (via SH SOTN)
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MadManMark - Wednesday, February 27, 2019 - link
Comparing laptop gaming to a wall tethered console is totally missing the point of these chips. We get it, you have no use for portable gaming. But assuming the rest of the world doesn't either is ... um, easy to disprove?mathew7 - Friday, March 8, 2019 - link
But I have a gaming system. That I don't want to take with me on the plane, in a business trip. But at the hotel I still want to play SOME games. Oh...and I want portability first, so I personally eliminate any 15" or larger (infact I accepted 14" just to widen my choice).br&newandrei - Tuesday, March 5, 2019 - link
@JoshuasBusiness, can you also teach me how to find the "sweet spot" in undervolting? I've got an i7-6700HQ and GTX950M and I've currently undervolted the CPU by 140 mV, but I don't know how to check if I can undervolt further and with how much I can undervolt the GPU. My e-mail is andreiflorin2804@outlook.com, you can write to me, thanks.urbanman2004 - Friday, February 22, 2019 - link
Specs probably weren't revealed due to them not being something to write home a/b